Public Documents of Massachusetts, 5. köide1875 |
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Page 137
... meat markets should be under the most careful supervision . Since the time of Moses , the Jews have carefully inspected all meat sold in their markets ; although their rules , based , probably , on the best sanitary knowledge of some ...
... meat markets should be under the most careful supervision . Since the time of Moses , the Jews have carefully inspected all meat sold in their markets ; although their rules , based , probably , on the best sanitary knowledge of some ...
Page 138
... meat when offered in the markets as human food . The inhabitants of the Faroe Islands habitually eat their meat in a high state of putrefaction , and enjoy from its fer- mented condition a sense of stimulation similar to that which the ...
... meat when offered in the markets as human food . The inhabitants of the Faroe Islands habitually eat their meat in a high state of putrefaction , and enjoy from its fer- mented condition a sense of stimulation similar to that which the ...
Page 139
... meat are weak and of slight power to resist disease . The instances where putrid meat has given rise to serious symptoms in those eating it are numerous , and to be found in all books on legal medicine . Six hundred people who ate ham ...
... meat are weak and of slight power to resist disease . The instances where putrid meat has given rise to serious symptoms in those eating it are numerous , and to be found in all books on legal medicine . Six hundred people who ate ham ...
Page 140
... meat . In a recent report of the Committee of the Metropolitan Association of Medical Officers of Health of London , is the following statement : - " Although it may be difficult to prove it by actual cases , there can be no doubt that ...
... meat . In a recent report of the Committee of the Metropolitan Association of Medical Officers of Health of London , is the following statement : - " Although it may be difficult to prove it by actual cases , there can be no doubt that ...
Page 166
... Meat in GenERAL . In one of our towns in Massachusetts , many families were made ill from eating meat which did not look suspicious , but came from a sick bull . In Genoa , when diseased meat was sold , it is said that epi- demics were ...
... Meat in GenERAL . In one of our towns in Massachusetts , many families were made ill from eating meat which did not look suspicious , but came from a sick bull . In Genoa , when diseased meat was sold , it is said that epi- demics were ...
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Common terms and phrases
abattoir almshouse ammonia amount animals attendance attic average Board of Health body Boston Bread burial butchers butter carbonic acid cattle cause cemetery cent Charlestown cholera condition containing corporation cremation Cremazione dei Cadaveri cysticercus dangerous dead death death-rate diarrhoea diphtheria disease doors open inwardly doors open outwardly Dresden East Boston employed England epidemic escape are stairway fact factory feet wide flat roof flesh graves hundred inches Inhumations injury intemperance interment intra-mural labor ladders large number larvæ less living London Massachusetts means of escape meat ment mortality Norman Street odor offal paper persons platforms population present prevalent prison Prof rendering rooms sanitary scarlet fever Sepultura sewer sheep sickness Sir Henry Thompson slaughter-house slaughtering soil Spinning Spooling stairway 4 feet stories Street suffering tion town typhoid fever ventilation weight wide in tower yards
Popular passages
Page 7 - If any druggist or other person sells or gives away any arsenic, strychnine, corrosive sublimate or prussic acid without the written prescription of a physician...
Page 273 - SEASONABLE considerations on the indecent and dangerous custom of burying in churches and church-yards. With remarkable observations historical and philosophical. Proving, that the custom is not only contrary to the practice of the antients, but fatal, in case of infection.
Page 190 - Correction, under such rules and regulations as may from time to time be adopted by the board of poor commissioners.
Page 14 - Eighth. If the intestate leaves a widow and no kindred, his estate shall descend to his widow ; and if the intestate is a married woman and leaves no kindred, her estate shall descend to her husband. Ninth. If the intestate leaves no kindred, and no widow or husband, his or her estate shall escheat to the Commonwealth.
Page 198 - ... court, shall be final and conclusive, and judgment shall be rendered and execution issued thereon ; and costs shall be recovered by the...
Page 11 - An Act for the Preservation of the Health and Morals of Apprentices and others employed in Cotton and other Mills and Cotton and other Factories...
Page 469 - To commence the manufacture of such articles as the society may determine upon, for the employment of such members as may be without employment, or who may be suffering in consequence of repeated reductions in their wages.
Page 88 - That no railroad, express company, car company, common carrier other than by water, or the receiver, trustee, or lessee of any of them, whose road forms any part of a line of road over which cattle, sheep, swine, or other animals...
Page 445 - Bureau affirms (Report for 1875, p. 445) that " it seems natural and just that a man's labor should be worth, and that his wages should be, as much as, with economy and prudence, will comfortably maintain himself and family, enable him to educate his children, and also to lay by enough for his decent support when his laboring powers have failed.
Page 201 - ... wherein said lands lie, a description thereof, as certain as is required in a common conveyance of lands, together with a statement of the purpose for which the lands are taken...